10 Worst Modifications for Students with Disabilities (and 100+ Good Ideas!) - Brookes Blog

10 Worst Modifications for Students with Disabilities (and 100+ Good Ideas!)

July 29, 2025

Good modifications are a wonderful way to support your students with disabilities so they can experience everything the general curriculum has to offer. But bad modifications—at best, they don’t help, and at worst, they can do more harm than good.

So how do you know the difference?

Before we get to that, here’s a quick refresher on the difference between modifications and accommodations, in case you’d like a clearer definition. Our friend Nicole Eredics at The Inclusive Class came up with this elegant little chart that summarizes the differences really well; with her permission, I’m including it here:

To summarize the difference, here’s a quote from Understood.org: “Accommodations change how a student learns the material. A modification changes what a student is taught or expected to learn.” Both happen within the general education classroom, but an IEP team might choose modifications to make the curriculum accessible and appropriate for a student with more significant learning needs.

When modifications are chosen over accommodations, sometimes there’s confusion about what types of alterations should be made to best help the student succeed. Let’s look at some examples. In The Speech-Language Pathologist’s Handbook for Inclusive School Practices, Julie Causton and Chelsea Tracy-Bronson list the top 10 worst types of classroom modifications for students with disabilities.

10 Worst Modifications

  1. The seventh grade class is doing math, but one student is using Sesame Street blocks to work on counting.
  2. The class is watching a video, but one student who is blind is sent out of the room because she can’t see.
  3. The classroom is arranged with desks in groups of five, but one student is seated in a group with only two desks, one for him and one for his assistant.
  4. While the rest of the high school class is doing reports on nutrition, one student is given a tub of dry beans and rice to “explore.”
  5. Fourth-grade students are adding adjectives to sentences, but because the SLP has not yet put adjectives on one student’s communication board, the student does not participate in this lesson.
  6. During silent reading, the SLP takes one student to the back of the classroom to work on articulation.
  7. Because one student has dressing goals on her individualized education program, she puts on and takes off her shoes two times when she gets ready for gym class.
  8. Because one student does not yet read, she listens to a music tape while the teacher reads aloud to the class.
  9. A student who types to communicate is provided with a device only during language arts class.
  10. A 12-year-old student goes with the second-grade class to physical education because his gross motor skills are “at that level.”

You can see what’s going on in these examples. Age-inappropriate materials that may embarrass a student and affect the way her peers perceive her. Classroom arrangements and schedules that physically divide a student from his same-age peers. “Modifications” that don’t have much to do with the lesson and don’t presume a student’s competence.

So how do we choose good modifications?

You’ll know a modification is good when it helps your student participate meaningfully and productively in class. Good modifications focus on a student’s individual strengths and needs, use age-appropriate materials, are relevant to the content everyone else is learning, and reflect a culture of high expectations. Causton and Tracy-Bronson share some solid modification ideas in their book–maybe you’ve tried some of these already in your own classroom.

( Please note that this list doesn’t provide direct, 1:1 alternatives to the “worst modifications” above—these are just a few options for helping students access the curriculum, and they won’t work for every learner. Your students will have a broad range of skills and abilities, and the modifications you choose should always be personalized to their specific strengths and needs.)

Want more ideas to add to your toolbox? In today’s download, you’ll get 100+ quick tips for modifications, adaptations, and accommodations. You’ll find a list of content-specific ideas for different subjects–math, reading, science, art, and more—and a list of supports for everyday activities, including test-taking, giving oral presentations, and getting organized. Print it and keep it handy (and share with your favorite teacher, too)!

Download 100+ bright ideas for modifying content and activities!

GET MODIFICATIONS